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Distance:
5.4 miles (round trip)
Walking time:
3 hours
Elevations:
170 ft. gain/loss
Calf Creek Trailhead (start):
5,340 ft.
Lower Calf Creek Falls:
5,510 ft.
Trail:
Popular, well maintained trail. A trail guide is usually
available at the trailhead.
Season:
Spring, summer, fall, winter. The trail is very hot
in the summer, with temperatures often exceeding 100
degrees F. For current conditions call the Escalante
Interagency Visitor Center at (801) 826-5499.
Vicinity:
Near Escalante and Boulder
The
Calf Creek Trail is the highlight of Calf Creek Recreation
Area, a delightful desert oasis maintained by the Bureau
of Land Management. The canyon is a haven for birds,
beaver, and other wildlife, and it was also once inhabited
by the Fremont and Anasazi Indians. Take a booklet with
you from the trailhead to help you spot some of the
Indian pictographs and two granaries that were constructed
by the Indians some 800-1000 years ago. Also, be sure
to take a swimming suit with you for use in the pool
at the bottom of Lower Calf Creek Falls.
The Calf Creek
Trail winds along the west side of Calf Creek, a small
desert stream surrounded by vertical walls of white
and pink Navajo Sandstone. Not surprisingly, much of
the trail is covered with loose sand. As the cliffs
erode, the ancient beds of sand from which the Navajo
Sandstone was originally made are slowly being returned
to the canyon floor. The dominant trees in the canyon
are pinion and juniper, although cottonwoods and box
elders can also be found along the stream. Many of the
latter species show damage from beaver; you can scarcely
walk a hundred yards along the stream without seeing
a beaver dam.
About 0.9 mile
from the trailhead a small stone structure can be seen
near the top of the cliffs across the river. This is
the remains of a granary built by the Fremont or Anasazi
Indians around 1100 A.D. to store the grain they grew
on the canyon floor. Another half mile upstream, closer
to the canyon floor, the Fremont Indians painted three
large ceremonial human figures in red. The coloring
of these pictographs is remarkably well preserved despite
centuries of exposure to the sun and rain. Still more
pictographs and another granary are visible in a small
side canyon west of the creek about 1.6 miles from the
trailhead.
Finally, after
2.7 miles, Calf Creek Canyon abruptly dead ends against
a 130-foot-high vertical wall of Navajo sandstone, making
it obvious that the end of the hike has been reached.
Here the creek emanates from the base of the Lower Calf
Creek Waterfall. The setting is beautiful, with a sandy
shore, large shade trees, and a clear pool below the
fall. Most hikers take an hour out for a swim here before
heading back.
Upper Calf
Creek Falls
Yes, there is also an
Upper Calf Creek Falls, though it is not nearly as attractive
as the lower falls and the hike to it not as interesting.
Nevertheless, if you still have time and energy left
after your hike to the lower falls you may want to continue
your exploration by hiking to the upper falls.
To reach Upper
Calf Creek Falls you must return to Highway 12 and check
your odometer at the entrance to Calf Creek Campground.
From that point, drive north towards Boulder for 6.0
miles where you will see a rocky dirt road taking off
on the left. Follow this road for a short distance to
a wide, sandy clearing on the edge of the rim. The trail
to Upper Calf Creek Falls drops off the rim near a large
pinyon pine tree on the edge of the clearing. It is
not a developed trail, but the BLM has placed rock cairns
along the route to guide you to the falls. The upper
falls are only about one mile from the highway, but
they are 600 feet lower in elevation and the hike out
can be tiring on a hot day.
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